In the success driven
society that we live in, I’m surprised there is so little out there about a
successful dying experience. There are
hundreds of books about how to be a successful parent, a successful spouse, a
successful employee or employer. There are
success how to’s for education, healthcare, businesses, nonprofits and
churches.
Likely, this absence of material about successful dying
comes from the link of success to achievement.
No one feels confident linking death with achievement. However, what about the idea of dying well?
Is this something individually or culturally we should strive for?
Dying well sits more comfortably with us, as we can
generalize a bit more about what dying well means. Usually it’s when there is an absence of
suffering, when the timing coincides with loved ones presence, when symptoms
are controlled and the environment is peaceful; things that at first glance
seem out of the control of the person who is dying.
While we may hesitate to discuss what dying well means,
historically this was not so. In the
1400’s at the behest of the Roman Catholic Church a booklet was published
called “Ars Moriendi” (The Art of Dying) and was the quintessential book on
preparing to die, and dying well. It was
widely circulated, with over 100 editions and translations into most European languages.
The book spiritualized dying, describing five temptations
people dying face. Those temptations
were lack of faith, despair, impatience, vanity and greed. The way to die well, then, was to fight these
temptations with their opposites. Dying
well meant having faith, hope, patience, humility and generosity.
In the 1400’s the availability of medications for symptom
management was non-existent. This
booklet served to place reason for many of the experiences people witnessed in
the death of a loved one. Without an
understanding of terminal delirium and restlessness, it was easier to claim
impatience as the cause and pray for patience.
In our modern day, medications and scientific understanding
help us recognize and treat the physical aspects to aid in dying well. There is more, however, that may be in our
control than we’d like to think.
Suffering, despite what we may believe, is not an easily
medicated symptom. Since suffering
originates from the mind, from experiences, and specifically beliefs and
thoughts about those experiences, the control rests solely on the individual. To die well, without suffering, may
incorporate some of the very things this 600-year-old book spoke of.
I have seen despair resolve when the focus of regrets moves
towards the hope of resolution. I have
seen vanity melt away with the courage to humbly ask for forgiveness. I have seen the suffering that stems from
the greed and self- focus of ‘why me?’ disappear with a shift to gratitude for
the life one has lived.
What does it mean to you to die well? It’s probably too
uncomfortable to equate dying well with successful dying, but let’s at least be
aware that some of the suffering we all want to avoid at the end can be dealt
with while we are living.
Photo: Master E.S. 1450 "Temptation of Avarice"
Photo: Master E.S. 1450 "Temptation of Avarice"
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